Browse Forums Pools & Spas Re: Newbie pool questions 5Feb 20, 2014 12:11 pm http://camdenbuild.blogspot.com.au/ by invite only please pm me Re: Newbie pool questions 7Feb 20, 2014 8:23 pm hgmonaro We've (in Melb) recently put in a pool so had to face some of your decisions too. 3. No sure this matters. I've read where salt is nicer to swim in, but I reckon maintainance is dependant on how anal you are. I'm a computer person and like my numbers to say what they should, others look at the water and say 'not green, all good'. One thing that did surprise me was the salt water clorinator is not very smart. I expected to be able to set it on a value and it would work towards that setting, but no, it is a percentage based system (not sure if they are all like that but from what I've read most are) and the setting is a percentage of it's maximum output. This means that it's not set and forget at all. As the level of sunshine, amount of swimming, etc all governs how much clorine is in the pool, I've found I still need to monitor that closely. A friend has an automatic ph tester/acid feeder and that sounds like a great bit of kit. I'm going to see if I can add one. 4. Solar (black pipes on roof) are pretty cheap and running cost not to bad (i.e. electicity for pump). We've found it to heat pool enough to make it possible to swim on days you'd wouldn't otherwise. When we've had a few hot days in a row we've had to turn it off as it got to hot. If you wanted gas you'd need to consider the gas line, which will most likely be expensive. No idea about heat pumps. My advice would be once it's in, to monitor it (water quality) closely at first and get it under control (depending how anal you are) quickly and stay on top of especially PH and clorine levels. Get a blanket, we haven't yet and water evaporation is considerable. 3. Salt is defiantly nicer to swim in .( No smelly chlorine ) being anal with a salt pool would be weekly checks. I monitor the numbers on a new pool every 2nd day for the first 3 weeks to fine tune settings. Then it generally requires a adjustment 4 times a year. I recommend during times of high bather loads running the system on manual . 4 black pipes on the roof are old school . The hard plastic panels look much better, more efficient, don't blow off in the wind & are cocky proof. Your solar should be set up with a separate pump & a auto controller If you turn your solar system on manually its a crap set up. Ph feeders are a great idea but generally very unreliable . About 80% I've seen are no longer used. Unless you have a lot of leaves & plant matter falling in your pool a typical 40000 litre fibreglass pool will use around 2-3 litres of acid a year. a building inspector should be able to tell you about any major problems but we need a floor plan with dimensions to clarify options for extra bedrooms ... sometime an… 1 8718 Personally, considering your layout (study/work desks in bedrooms), I don't think you have any other option but to leave NW windows and make them as big as possible e.g.… 7 10470 We had this happen to us last year and got charged a variation. Try and give away as much as you can that is usable to charity otherwise if you are in Sydney I have a… 1 4494 |